A Concept for Real-Time Solar Wind Monitor at Multiple Locations L5 in Tandem with L1: Future Space-Weather Missions Workshop March 8 th, 2017 George C. Ho Sector Science and Space Instrumentation Branch Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory George.Ho@jhuapl.edu
Introduction The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU/APL) pioneered real-time solar wind monitor (RTSW) by working with NOAA to incorporate that capability on the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) spacecraft Over the years, APL has been working on the next generation RTSW concept that is based on our experience on ACE, STEREO and Van Allen Probes missions Our current concept provides in-situ bulk plasma, particles, and fields measurements as well as coronagraph remote sensing on a three-axis platform at the L1 location as well as a second, equivalent measurement set in the quadrant trailing Earth in its 1 AU orbit This concept presents a path to a permanent solution to the NOAA solar and upstream monitoring space weather requirements presently being met by NASA s ACE, SOHO, STEREO and NOAA s DSCOVR
Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) Launched in 1997 for a 2-3 years mission, ACE continues to return high-quality science data after 20 years The spacecraft consists of nine (9) field and particles instruments, and four of those provide data to the Real-time Solar Wind (RTSW): Ø SWEPAM (solar wind plasma); Ø MAG (Interplanetary magnetic field); Ø EPAM (low energy particle); Ø SIS (high-energy particle) The ACE RTSW data pave the way for what future real-time space weather should be STEREO and Van Allen Probes also implemented beacon data system
NOAA Upstream Solar Wind Measurement Requirements Real Time Solar Wind (RTSW) system will have at least one element on the Sun-Earth line to measure: In-situ Ø Magnetic field vector Ø Bulk solar wind vector velocity, ion temperature and ion density Ø Energetic ions and electrons Remote Ø Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) in the low corona Detect and characterize CME events Minimum of two images into cone model Define inner boundary of heliospheric propagation models Service requirements: Ø Continuous data flow Ø Broadcast within one minute of measurement, products available in operations center within 5 minutes Ø Data for 3-7 years Ø Data delivered to acceptable duty station and real-time operation
APL Space Weather Follow-on Study Baseline: Two identical spacecraft Three axis stabilized L1, L5 plus/minus 1AU (off-angle) In-situ plus white-light coronagraph STEREO orbit transfer approx. five years transit time to 90 degrees before Earth Single/Dual Manifest Launch options Threshold: Three axis stabilized - L1 In-situ plus white-light coronagraph
Spacecraft Summary Spacecraft mass (<300 kg) Athena IIc for single spacecraft Antares for dual spacecraft Continuous real-time communications Both spacecraft can have similar or different instrumentation 3-year design life Consumables for 10yr
Launch - Dual Payloads 3 Basic Design Concepts GPS Iridium RBSP JASON/TIMED PTSS STEREO Stacked Dual Payload Structure Platform Stacked Single launch could be accommodated via an appropriate rideshare
Instrument set for both 3-axis platforms This set of instruments meets all of the NOAA / Real-Time Solar Wind measurement requirements Spacecraft can accommodate more payload if it can meet the schedule requirements Required Measurement Instrument Parameters Mass (kg) Power (W) Heritage Solar Wind Velocity and Density Faraday Cup 200-2000 km/s; 1-100 cm -3 ; 400K- 2MK ~3.2 ~3 SAO/UofMich Magnetic Field Magnetometer 0 - ±100 nt along for each component 2.5 2.5 APL/GSFC Solar Wind Low Energy Ion Low energy particles package ~30-5000 kev ion; ~30-1000 kev electron 3.5 4 APL CME Imagery (GFE) Coronagraph White light 3.7 17 Rs 15.5 25 NRL CCOR Total ~24.7 ~34.5
CCOR Sensor Overview The NRL Compact Coronagraph (CCOR) is an small envelope coronagraph for operational satellite that meets space weather forecasting requirements for imaging of coronal mass ejections (CMEs) near the Sun
Solar Wind Ion Faraday Cup Measure the Solar Wind plasma (both ion and electron) Large Field-of-View (60 ) Mount facing directly to the Sun Heritage from Wind, DSCOVR, Solar Probe Plus High voltage to accommodate maximum velocity requirement
Low Energy Particle Instrument Measure the energetic ion and electron Ion: ~10 kev to 5 MeV Electron: ~10 kev to 1 MeV Fan like FoV: 160 x12 Mount such that the large FoV is in the ecliptic plane to sample (sunward and anti-sunward direction) High heritage instrument
APL Launch and On-station Support APL will build the two spacecraft and integrate the instruments APL I&T Group will perform Integration & Test (I&T) activities. APL Mission Operations Team (MOT) will Ø Develop the Mission Concept of Operations. Ø Develop the Mission Simulation test plan and procedures. Ø Train NOAA/NASA Flight Controllers (FCs), planners, analysts. Ø Support Launch and Early Orbit Operations (LEOP) until spacecraft are on station (TBD ~90 days after launch).
Summary APL leverages expertise from ACE, STEREO, and Van Allen Probes to design the next space weather monitor system Small satellite solutions identified that address key upstream requirements The design satisfies the NOAA RTSW requirements and provides an offangle spacecraft option to identify transient solar wind events These platforms have resources to accommodate additional scientific instrumentation 48 months development schedule can meet sponsor needs Ø ACE Satellite End of Life Expected in ~2022 Ø DSCOVR